Every now and then you run into a small discovery that you know you will ever need again in your life. This is where I throw together all of mine. Perhaps they come in handy for you too...

Sunday, November 30, 2008

App-V 4.5 Certificate Galore

1) SettingThis weekend I finally found some time to delve a bit deeper into properly configuring an App-V 4.5 infrastructure for large scale deployments. One of the first things that I investigated was the usage of RTSPS for smoother firewall tunneling: as you know, when using RTSP a series of ports is dynamically chosen, which means that you need to open up entire portranges in your firewall. This is not something your firewall guys will like if you work in a larger environment.

Going for RTSPS means you need to use a server public certificate and a corresponding private key in order to let the App-V server sign and encrypt its communications. I have blogged before about how to configure this in SoftGrid 4.1/4.2 -- luckily the procedure for configuring an SSL certificate got a lot simpler. At least, that is what I thought. Some issues I ran into that might save you some valuable troubleshooting time:

As always, when requesting a certificate from your Enterprise PKI, use the Virtual Application Server's FQDN as the subject. It is probably also a good idea to use the hostname as a subject alternate name for those people that still refer to servers by their shortnames.

After the App-V 4.5 Web Management Service has been installed, don't forget to configure the certificate for the IIS Default Website. In IIS7, that requires adding a binding & selecting the proper certificate. It is not clear to me why the App-V installer cannot handle this automatically!?

App-V 4.5 runs under the NETWORK SERVICE account by default and no longer under the SYSTEM account as SoftGrid 4.1/4.2 used to. This has some consequences when it comes to Windows PKI: you need to grant the NETWORK SERVICE account read permissions on the private key.

This later action is a lot harder than you think when reading them ;). Read on for more information.

2) Configuring permissions on private keysYou have three options to get this working:

If you are using a Windows 2008 Enterprise CA and are using your own certificate templates, then you can modify the template to automatically grant the NETWORK SERVICE account read permissions on all certificates issued using that template.

Since you will typically be creating a new certificate template for server deployment (to enable longer than 2 years validity & exporting of private keys), this is probably the easiest solution if you have a Windows Server 2008 Enterprise CA.

In a pre-Windows 2008 CA world, you will have to use the WinHTTPcertcfg.exe tool, the Windows HTTP Services Certificate Configuration tool. In our situation, we need to modify the ACL of the certificate to grant read access to the service account of the Management Service (which is the NETWORK SERVICE by default).

First, obtain the certificate thumbprint. You can find this in the details tab of the certificate:

Copy/paste the thumbprint for the next commandline.

Next, use the FindPrivateKey.exe utility to locate the private key file on disk (compiled version available here -- download & use untrusted executables from the internet at your own risk). Use the following syntax:

FindPrivateKey.exe My LocalMachine -t "your thumbprint"

This will give you the full path. Read the caveat message below if this path looks awkward.

CAVEAT: the location of the private key should be in a publicly accessible location. For WinXP/Win2K3 the default is:C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Microsoft\Crypto\RSA\MachineKeys For W2K8/Vista, this changed to:C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Crypto\RSA\MachineKeysIf you have a different location, then take actions to deplace the private key. I requested my certificate through the Web Enrollment pages of Active Directory Certificate Services on Windows 2008. This stores the public & private key in your user account's profile by default. I knew this and drog & dropped the public certificate from the "Certificates (My User)" to the "Certificates (My Computer)" MMC and when your private key was marked as exportable, this is indeed possible. However, this does not actually move the private key and leaves it in your user profile location (for example: C:\Users\Administrator\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Crypto\RSA). I fixed this by explicitly exporting the certificate & private key from my user account and then explicitly importing everything again. So huge warning for all you regular crypto-users: no more drag 'n dropping of public/private keypairs!

4) ConclusionA bit messy... yet secure! The move towards the NETWORK SERVICE account for the App-V Management service (... and other Microsoft products as well) is obviously a good choice, yet it brings along some difficulties that probably can be streamlined from within the App-V Management Server's installer.

PS: You didn't forget to grant the NETWORK SERVICE account also read permissions on your content directory, since otherwise your streaming won't work?

About Me

I work at an IT company called ThingTank, a subsidiary of the Xylos group. We focus primarily on Internet-of-Thing solutions combined with Artificial Intelligence (predictive analytics). My focus as a technology architect is constructing IoT solutions for our customers, with a personal focus on the devices - both the micro electronics and the programming - and the analytics - mostly predictive analytics using R or Python.